The Colorado Authors’ League announced winners in 10 categories Friday night at its annual awards dinner in Cherry Creek.

Lois Beebe Hayna, still writing at 102 years old, won the 2015 CAL prize for poetry for her latest volume, “Lagniappe.” The former Colorado Springs resident traveled from her new home in Montrose, Mich., to receive the award.

In 2014, Hayna received CAL’s Lifetime Achievement Award. Bestselling adventure novelist Clive Cussler was the recipient of the honor this year.

Denver author Mark Stevens, a former reporter for The Denver Post, took the prize in genre fiction for his novel “Trapline,” third in his Alison Coil mystery series. J.M. Mitchell of Littleton won the award for mainstream fiction for “The Height of Secrecy,” about politics and wildfire inside the nation’s park system.

Mary Taylor Young of Castle Rock won in general nonfiction for her coffee table book, “Rocky Mountain National Park: The First 100 Years.”

Restaurant critic William Porter is a feature writer at The Denver Post, where he covers food, culture and people. He joined the news outlet in 1997. Before that, he spent 14 years covering politics and popular culture at The Phoenix Gazette and Arizona Republic. He is a native of North Carolina.

Eastbound lanes of Interstate 70 were closed Saturday afternoon at Georgetown due to a semitrailer fire, the Colorado Department of Transportation tweeted. The right lane remains closed, while the other lanes have since reopened. Drivers can expect heavy delays, transportation officials said. The fire initially closed both sides of the interstate as smoked crossed the highway. The load on the...